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A team of scientists discovered a Japanese naval destroyer for the first time since it was sunk by American troops in World ...
After the attack, crews sailed the USS "New Orleans" backwards for more than 1,000 miles across the Pacific. Since then, the ...
World War Two has had a vast array of warships on both sides, but one class of ships was faster than the rest and one ship ...
The Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Teruzuki was discovered more than 2,600 feet below the ocean's surface near the Solomon ...
After 80 years, researchers located the bow of USS New Orleans torn off by a Japanese torpedo during a 1942 WWII naval battle that killed over 180 crew members.
Iowa-class battleships measured 887 feet long and displaced 58,460 tons, with crews ranging from 2,500 during WWII to 1,573 ...
Researchers have found the missing bow of the USS New Orleans, a WWII warship torn apart in battle, off the coast of the ...
"I feel like this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," a Japanese researcher who confirmed the vessel told Newsweek in an exclusive interview.
Japanese WWII destroyer Teruzuki spotted 800m deep in the Solomon Islands, solving an 80-year-old naval mystery.
Researchers and scientists found a part of an 80-year-old damaged World War II warship more than 600 meters deep in the ...
A Japanese torpedo slammed into the USS New Orleans in 1942, tearing off nearly one-third of the ship and killing over 180 ...